Tuesday, January 26, 2016

The X-Files returned to network television for a six episode miniseries. The show was created by Chris Carter, which originally aired for nine seasons from 1993 to 2002 on the Fox network. The series premiered simultaneously in Canada and the USA on Sunday, January 24, 2016.

During its run, the science fiction/horror show dealt with a multitude of conspiracies, including a U.S. government coverup of extraterrestrial visitation and the phenomenon of alien abduction. For good or ill, no other program has been more influential in raising the public consciousness on the topic of UFOs and exopolitics.

The show stars David Duchovny as FBI special agent Fox Mulder, previously assigned to the X-Files, a firm believer in the paranormal and the existence of extraterrestrial life. Gillian Anderson plays Dana Scully, a medical doctor and FBI agent previously assigned to the X-Files to overlook the validity of its cases. Scully is initially a skeptic but eventually comes to believe.

The original series often took a long and meandering, sometimes confusing, journey in revealing its central extraterrestrial conspiracy. The show was unique for television, as it provided no easy answers and seldom gave any resolution to its stories. As a mirror to real life, it left the question of UFOs and extraterrestrials an open question.

Episode One: My Struggle

All that changed dramatically on Sunday night with the premier of Episode 1, “My Struggle.” In one hour, network television did something utterly unbelievable. The X-Files gave us full disclosure, and I’m still trying to wrap my head around it.“Are we being lied to?” – Fox Mulder

The show began with a lengthy prologue from Fox Mulder, summing up the plot of the original series, yet providing plenty of concise, real world information. The program then went into a reenactment of the infamous Roswell crash, using the event as a cornerstone for the plot.

Fox Mulder and Dana Scully are called out of X-Files retirement by an internet conspiracy media celebrity, a sort of Alex Jones character (if Alex Jones owned a helicopter) who believes that 9/11 is a government conspiracy and coverup. To my knowledge, this has to be the first time a network television show openly and seriously called 9/11 a false flag event without any laughter.

“Since 9/11, this country has taken a strange turn in a very bizzare direction,” – Tad O’Malley

Tad O’Malley enlists Mulder and Scully to help blow the lid off the global conspiracy on his internet television program, which is precisely what this episode does. And to my utter amazement, this episode goes beyond its own extraterrestrial abduction mythology to present the real truth to the world, that most of the extraterrestrial abductions are not being performed by ETs, but are in fact being performed by military personnel in reverse engineered, alien reproduction vehicles using cloned alien biological entities.

The X-Files just went beyond the looking glass. In the space of an hour, the show covered almost every major point in Doctor Steven Greer mind-boggling 4 hour lectureon disclosure, “How the Secret Government Really Works.”WATCH IT HERE.

I almost wonder if Dr. Greer was asked to be a consultant for this episode.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. Here is a list of some of the major conspiracies that were covered in this episode:

By the end of the episode, the shadow government stops Tad O’Mally from releasing full disclosure, however this episode of The X-Flies succeeds in that respect. The question is WHY? WHY NOW?

I never thought that I would see this kind of full disclosure from Hollywood on a network television program, and without any trace of some duplicitous agenda.

There is absolutely nothing to be gained by the elite in releasing this much information to the public in this form.

My conjecture is that some external force has put great pressure upon the elite to begin releasing some form of full disclosure, and this is how they have decided to do it – on a network television program notorious for concocted conspiracy theories, that is delayed in broadcast by a football game and post game show on a Sunday night when a major blizzard has brought the entire east coast of the United States to a standstill.

And yet, the event was not completely free from elite programming. The television commercials in particular caught my attention. There were the ads for FOX’s newest TV series, Lucifer, making the devil sexy. There were the ads for the new video game, XCOM2:“Their evolution, our extinction! XCOM2. Join us, or become them.” And then there was another ad for Ford that ran repeatedly: “She can rage and roar and crack and storm, but mother nature can’t stop US,” which I couldn’t help but feel sounded like desperate bravado from the elite, that they think they can still stop Gaia’s ascension.

Will this X-Files episode of full disclosure have any effect upon the sleeping public?

We will just have to wait and see. I fear that most television zombies will simply need a truck to fall on their heads before they wake up from their coma of denial. They will need some kind of real world disclosure not cloaked in a television program, and even then they will struggle “to believe.” However, this is an incredibly promising positive step in the right direction.

2016 should be a very interesting year!

Whether the new X-Files continues to feed us disclosure, or if this is a hit-and-run, one time shot across the bow, and the rest of the episodes return to a harmless dramatic narrative, we’ll just have to wait and see.

Stay tuned. I will be watching future episodes and updating this post.